2008 was an interesting year for DSLR photographers and, in general, even if you ignore the ultra-high-end announcements from Leica, and Red Hassleblad The three main players in the DSLR space (with Nikon and Canon are about 40 % market share and Sony with around 10%) all started milestone cameras. Below we present in detail their hits and misses. Nikon After their pioneering publications in 2007 with the Nikon D3 and D300, they set the bar high for the year 2008, but ingenerally not disappoint with four new committees: Nikon D60 Although not revolutionary, the Nikon D60 replaces the D40x in Nikon's consumer lineup, into a smaller, better package to one of the smallest and lightest DSLR's ever made. Nikon D700 Coming almost a complete surprise, the Nikon D700 was launched in mid-summer, with the 12-megapixel full-frame sensor from the flagship D3, but with a body like the D300. At $ 3000, showed the cameraNikon's commitment to FX, and the camera is now the choice
Not that it makes a difference as much as you can imagine, but the D90 Digital SLR has a tiny (12.3MP) image sensor as an affordable T1i Rebel (15.1MP). With these data and applying a little common sense would not lead to a technical person to believe that the Digital Rebel is by far the smarter buy T1i. As with many other things in this world and digital SLR cameras, things are not always as obvious as they should be. The image sensor from Canon is currently used,is not optimal sensor. Not, however, are starting to think everything you read digital SLR package. The APS-C sensor in the Rebel SLR T1i be used, will be rigorously tested to treat 15.1 MP in the best case. To achieve a higher megapixel rate, selected Canon are closer to the pixels, and smaller pixels than the Nikon D90 using 12.3MP used. It is the most widespread, fit more pixels to be on a smaller area. A more accurate indicator of imageQuality as a mega-pixel is pixel density. In this case, is the Nikon D90 12.3MP l
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